Movie Stats:
Released 1960 (USA)
American, in English
Director – Billy Wilder (who also directed previous winner
The Lost Weekend)
Stars – Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, Fred MacMurray
Plot Summary:
Lowly insurance agent C.C. Baxter (Lemmon) has been working
his way up the corporate ladder by letting several executives in his office use
his apartment as a place to bring their sidepieces. When Personnel Manager Jeff
Sheldrake (MacMurray) approaches him about using the apartment, C.C. finally
gets what he wants: an executive position with his own office. However, there’s
an unintended consequence he hadn’t considered, and C.C. has to decide whether
the trouble is worth it after all. MacLaine co-stars as C.C.’s love interest,
Fran Kubelik.
Bad Stuff:
I have nothing against Jack Lemmon, but I feel like he
played the same character a lot. While it works for this film, I was like, “Oh,
there’s Jack Lemmon being Jack Lemmon again.”
Using private personnel files to look up personal
information (such as address and social security number) of a co-worker you
find attractive is creepy no matter how you slice it. Don’t be fooled by this
movie, where Fran giggles about it like it’s somehow charming.
It’s only two hours long, but I got a bit bored by the end.
A few scenes simply played out too long & could have been trimmed.
Good Stuff:
Shirley MacLaine’s performance was great.
To me, this seems like a risqué topic for 1960. I like that
the film approached it directly, without euphemisms or vague reference. Also,
there was no shaming of the women involved in these liaisons (although there
was some shaming of the men), which was refreshing. Frankly, I was pleasantly
surprised.
This is the first one of these Oscar winners that I can
recall thinking to myself that I really enjoyed the music. Usually, I’m
flat-out annoyed by it.
The Verdict:
Over the years, I’d tried to watch this movie twice before but
could never make it all the way through. I couldn’t really say why, perhaps
because I find it slightly boring. I made it through just fine this time. I
liked it well enough. It didn’t move me, and it didn’t give me warm fuzzies,
but it wasn’t bad either.
It’s funny, because at the beginning of the movie, I was
thinking that, stylistically, it reminded me of “The Lost Weekend.” Later, I
realized that it’s the same director. So that makes sense. This one has a
maudlin air about it as well, although it mixed in some humor as well. Even so, I think
“The Lost Weekend” is the better film of the two.
This is one of those movies you watch just to impress people at parties with your knowledge of old cinema. I give it 3.5 stars.
2 comments:
And you are going to blow people out of the water with your knowledge of cinema.
Yeah, I'm sure they'll be totally impressed. Or more likely not at all, haha.
I did impress at trivia last night for knowing that the OJ in OJ Simpson stands for Orenthal James.
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